Classical music moves the heart in vegetative patients

Classical music moves the heart in vegetative patients 13:30 02 July 2010 by Wendy Zukerman For similar stories, visit the The Human Brain Topic Guide

Classical music pulls at the heartstrings of people in a vegetative state as well as those of healthy listeners. If you play music to vegetative patients, their heart rate changes in the same way as that of healthy controls, suggesting that music can affect the neural systems of emotion even when conscious thought is impossible.

Francesco Riganello at the Santa Anna Institute in Crotone, Italy, and colleagues played four pieces of classical music to 16 healthy volunteers while measuring their heartbeats. The team then repeated the experiment with nine people who were in a vegetative state. In addition, they asked the healthy volunteers to describe the emotions they had felt while listening.

The pieces, each 3 minutes long and by different composers, were chosen because they have different tempos and rhythms – factors previously shown to elicit positive and negative emotions.

Riganello found that the music affected the heart rates of both groups in the same way. Pieces rated as "positive" by healthy volunteers, such as the minuet from Boccherini's string quintet in E, slowed heart rate, while "negative" pieces like Tchaikovsky's sixth symphony increased heart rate. Cut off

People are medically defined as vegetative when they have no recognisable behavioural responses to external stimuli, says Riganello. "Generally it is thought that vegetative patients are isolated from the external world, but maybe this is incorrect."

Interestingly, heartbeat patterns detected in people listening to Boccherini's music in previous studies indicated that the listeners were becoming relaxed. Riganello suggests that listening to music may have caused "some relaxation" in the vegetative patients.

He believes this reaction originates from the lower regions of the brain, such as the limbic and paralimbic system. These are known to control emotion and autonomic responses and "may remain active after extensive brain damage".

"It's a nice paper," says Ashley Craig, a rehabilitation neuroscientist at the University of Sydney, Australia, who was not involved in the study. He points out, however, that it doesn't show the vegetative people feel emotions as healthy people do. Although their basic, automatic brain functions are working, "that's very different" from the higher cognitive processes required to be conscious and feel emotions, he says.

Alan Harvey at the University of Western Australia in Crawley agrees, but finds it very interesting that "music has this way of affecting neural systems that process emotion even in the absence of conscious thought".